Back to Search Start Over

Bimodality in tropical water vapour

Authors :
Brian E. Mapes
Chidong Zhang
Brian J. Soden
Source :
Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society. 129:2847-2866
Publication Year :
2003
Publisher :
Wiley, 2003.

Abstract

Probability distribution functions of tropospheric water vapour in the tropics are shown to be commonly bimodal. This bimodality implies sharp gradients between dry and moist regimes in space and time. A method of testing for and quantifying bimodality is introduced. Using this method, the bimodality of water vapour is surveyed in satellite and in situ observations, as well as in global model re-analysis data and simulations. The bimodality suggests that the radiative drying time after an injection of moisture by convection is short (1–2 days) compared to a homogenizing time, whether physical (mixing) or mathematical (averaging). It is shown that the local bimodality found in cloud-model simulations and in situ point measurements disappears with modest time averaging (18 h and 200 km), but then reappears on the global-scale, where dry and moist regions are separated so widely that synoptic- and large-scale mixing times exceed the drying time-scale. Large discrepancies exist in the ability to reproduce the global-scale bimodality by global model re-analysis and simulations. Copyright © 2003 Royal Meteorological Society

Details

ISSN :
1477870X and 00359009
Volume :
129
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........8a787fba6e62be3a32776d763724106e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1256/qj.02.166